In solidarity with victims of racial violence
A letter in which President Sonya Stephens denounces racial violence and gathers the College community for a virtual vigil in its wake.
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Sonya Stephens
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
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A letter in which President Sonya Stephens denounces racial violence and gathers the College community for a virtual vigil in its wake.
When Mount Holyoke’s campus closed and Mara Benjamin’s Introduction to Judaism class couldn’t present an in-person exhibition, they made a virtual one.
PeoplesBank has made the inaugural contribution to a scholarship fund to help local students attend Mount Holyoke College.
Mount Holyoke College helped prepare them to lead, say congresswoman Nita Lowey ’59 and Deborah Frank Feinen ’89, mayor of Champaign, Illinois.
At the University of Nebraska Medical Center, Mount Holyoke alumna Eleanor Rogan ‘63 chairs a department doing urgent COVID-19 research.
Skylar Hou ’22 missed her friends on campus so much she drew them into her photographs.
A letter to the class of 2020 regarding Commencement plans due to COVID-19.
Mount Holyoke alum Linda Craib FP’02 and Nellie Rose Davis ’11 are volunteering their time to help people protect themselves.
“Mount Holyoke has pushed me to be comfortable with being uncomfortable. I’ve gained understanding and appreciation for people who see things differently.”
Despite more than 50 years separating their time on campus, the connection between Judy Parker Stone ’68 and Kayla Samuel ’23 was immediate.